Imagine you’re running a lemonade stand. When it’s sunny, everyone wants lemonade, so you sell lots and make more money, that’s the boom. But when it rains for weeks, no one buys your lemonade, and you lose money, that’s the bust. Economies do this too, but on a much bigger scale. Sometimes people are excited about buying things, like cars or houses, which makes everyone happy, but then they stop buying, and everything slows down.
Examples
- A small business owner opens two more stores because everyone is shopping, but when people stop spending, she has to close one of them.
- A student gets a job at a fast food restaurant right after high school, but during the bust, there are no more jobs available.
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See also
- Why Do Economies Grow or Collapse?
- How Do ‘Economies’ Actually Grow?
- Why Do Economies Go Up and Down?
- How do interest rates influence consumer spending and economic growth?
- How Do Economies Grow, and Why Do Some Fail?